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magazine / nd04
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November/December 2004 issue |
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MOSAIC
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| Photo: David Trattles
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Maple leaf on the Mediterranean
Photography by David Trattles
It’s not unusual to spot Canadian flags or to hear the strains of "O Canada!" on July 1 on Gozo, a tiny Maltese island in the Mediterranean south of Sicily. Canada Day,
for the 80 member families of the Gozo branch of the Maltese Canadian Association, is a chance
to celebrate their "second homeland." Most are returned emigrants from Canada.
The group was formed in 1996 after Alfred Camilleri, a Gozo native who spent 30 years working
for Canada Post in Toronto, moved back to the island and threw a Canada Day poolside party
that attracted nearly 100 people. Since then, the association has organized July 1 festivities
and other events to maintain its Canadian ties.
Camilleri is one of about 140,000 people — almost half of Malta’s population — who
left their devastated country in the decades following the Second World War. As the European
nation’s economy recovered in the late 1970s, many returned. Observing Canada’s
national holiday, says Camilleri, "is a way to say thanks to the country that welcomed
us with open arms and gave us a chance for a better life. Personally, I also learned a lot.
Canada taught me how to respect and accept other people’s beliefs and cultures."
Monique Roy-Sole
For the rest of this story, visit your local newsstand or go to our store to buy this issue.
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